The war of words : the language of British elections, 1880-1914

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The war of words : the language of British elections, 1880-1914

Luke Blaxill

(Royal Historical Society studies in history new series)

Royal Historical Society , Boydell Press, 2020

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 309-332) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A radical new approach to the political speeches delivered during this period. The late nineteenth and early twentieth century have been widely eulogised as a "golden age" of popular platform oratory. This book considers the language of British elections - especially stump speeches - during this period. It employs a "big data" methodology inspired by computational linguistics, using text-mining to analyse over five million words delivered by Conservative, Liberal and Labour candidates in the nine elections that took place in this period. It systematically and authoritatively quantifies how and how far key issues, values, traditions and personalities manifested themselves in wider party discourse. The author reassesses a number of central historical debates, arguing that historians have considerably underestimated the transformative impact of the 1883-5 reforms on rural party language, and the purchase of Joseph Chamberlain's Unauthorized Programme; that the centrality of Home Rule and Imperialism in the late 1880s and 1890s have been exaggerated; and that the New Liberalism's linguistic impact was relatively weak, failing to contain the message of the emerging Labour alternative.

Table of Contents

Introduction: the challenge of reintegration in political history On method: text-mining, corpora and the historical study of language The impact of reform: the general elections of 1880 and 1885 The impact of Home Rule: the general elections of 1886 and 1892 The impact of imperialism: the general elections of 1895 and 1900 The impact of New Liberalism: the general elections of 1906 and 1910 Conclusion: who won the war of words? Appendix 1: Technical and methodological Appendix 2: Statistical Bibliography

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